Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Skip to content Skip to footer
Truthout LogoTruthout

Trending:

Truthout LogoTruthout
Menu
Filter Search

Social Media

Sections

Trending

Latest

More

© 2025 Truthout
War & Peace

How Afghanistan’s Peace Movement Is Winning Hearts and Minds

The impetus for the peace movement is the growing insecurity and increase in violence.

By
Published
Afghan peace activists shout slogans in demand to an end to the war during a march from Helmand as they arrive in Kabul on June 18, 2018.

Truthout is a vital news source and a living history of political struggle. If you think our work is valuable,support us with a donation of any size.

In May 2018, a group of seven Afghans in the mostly Taliban controlled province of Helmand set off on a more than 370-mile peace journey to the capital city, Kabul, sparking a nationwide movement.

Residents of Helmand have been paying a high price ever since the province turned into a battleground between Afghan forces and the Taliban. The catalyst for the peace march was a car bomb attack during a wrestling match in March that killed 14 people.

The protesters began with a hunger strike and a sit-in protest in the province’s capital, Lashkar Gah, within 24 hours of the suicide attack to demand an end to the violence. The activists held meetings with both the government and the Taliban, but when no results were produced they decided to walk to Kabul to further advocate for their peace message.

Never miss another story

Get the news you want, delivered to your inbox every day.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

The war-weary Afghans traveled across the country, passing through difficult terrain in the scorching hot sun. The final leg of their march happened during the holy month of Ramadan, which they continued while observing their fast. They were welcomed in the villages which they passed through and were offered food, water and places to rest.

In total, they marched across six provinces, passing by Taliban-controlled areas. In the city of Ghazni, they were even warned by the Taliban not to enter an area because it would be dangerous. “We met Taliban fighters and, after an introduction, they told us we shouldn’t have come here because the area is planted with bombs, and they had planned an attack,” one of the protesterstoldThe Telegraph. “After minutes of discussion with them, they seemed tired of it all, and the war. They directed us back to the safest area.”

Their tenacity and courage attracted around a hundred Afghans from places like Kandahar and Herat to join their peace movement, including women. The female protesters were asked to return home after protesting during the day, due to traditional sensitivities around spending nights on the roads. They reached Kabul when the ceasefire on Eid al-Fitr was just coming to an end in June. The protesters had covered over 370 miles by foot in a span of 40 days. They were given a warm greeting by Kabul residents who offered them food and water as well.

Despite being exhausted, the protesters were ready for their next phase of activism. They met Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and gave him a list of demands for sustainable peace. Some of the demands included hosting a place for peace talks, brokering a one-year ceasefire and launching a new mechanism that will look into the interests and needs of all Afghans. The protesters also formed a committee to reach out to the Taliban with a similar set of demands.

The activists then held sit-in protests outside the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan office and sent a letter to UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, urging him to take a proactive approach towards the ongoing conflict in the country.

The group also strategically targeted key stakeholders and institutions, such as the American, British, Russian, Iranian and Pakistani embassies, which are perceived to have an external hand in the war. They held sit-ins for three days outside each of the embassies and plan to launch solidarity demonstrations in their home countries. “By holding our demonstrations, we want to create a relationship between our people and the citizens of those countries,” Bismillah Watandost, one of the protesters,toldTOLO News. “And we hope the citizens of the foreign countries ask their governments why Afghans are protesting outside their embassies.”

After Kabul, the Helmand protesters carried on with their mission by walking barefoot another 340 miles to reach Mazar-e-Sharif from Aug. 10 to Sept. 11. Their purpose was to bring their message of peace to residents in northern Afghanistan. They also conducted dialogues with religious leaders, tribal elders and the general public in places where they stopped. The protesters had developed various strategies of persuasion and deterrence tailored to the different institutions they were engaging.

Their activism was the result of a well-planned strategy to reach out to their fellow citizens from the southern and northern provinces. The movement was led by Iqbal Khaibar, who is a demonstrator from Helmand and was a key member of the Lashkar Gah sit-in. Khaibar said that they were fearful of reprisals along the way, which is why they developed a strategy of establishing support groups that would continue the march if some of the participants were attacked or killed.

Moreover, the peace march emerged at the right time, just when the Afghan government reached out to the Taliban with an unconditional ceasefire offer. The Afghan High Peace Council — a body established by former President Hamid Karzai to negotiate with the Taliban — has also echoed its support for the Helmand peace movement. The council has played a substantial role in the country’s reconciliation and peacebuilding process.

Nationwide protests

The Helmand peace march has set a precedent for other nonviolent protests across the country. In June, Afghan women and girls personallywelcomedthe Taliban with flowers in Helmand province and urged them to extend the Eid al-Fitr ceasefire. Although the Taliban did not respond to the ceasefire extension request, the protest was bold. Their action would have been unthinkable in recent decades, when there were strict restrictions on women’s freedom of movement. Most Afghan women do not leave their houses to attend protests. By pouring out into the streets for an all-female protest, they displayed their audacity and strength.

The peace movement has been one of the key factors pressuring both the government and the Taliban to reach a peace agreement and end the civil war. The three-day ceasefire during Eid al-Fitr was a product of this nonviolent resistance, which added pressure on the Taliban to accept the offer. Although the Taliban ruled out the government’s offer for another ceasefire during Eid al-Adha, it has not stopped the peace movement’s momentum. More peace marches, protests and acts of civil disobedience are regularly springing up in Afghanistan.

The impetus for the peace movement is the growing insecurity and increase in violence since 2001. Most Afghans are simply frustrated with their living conditions and want the war to end. The Uppsala Conflict Data Program hasshowna surge in the number of casualties in recent years. In 2001, there were 5,553 deaths in the country. By 2017, the number soared to 19,694.

A 2017 Asia Foundationsurveyrevealed that as the number of fatalities has increased, so too has the fear for personal safety or insecurity — from 40 percent in 2001 to 71 percent in 2017. The survey also demonstrated that the movement is reflective of public opinion in Afghanistan. It found that over 60 percent of Afghans think that a peace process would usher in long-term stability in the country, and more than half of Afghans think that reconciliation with the Taliban is likely to happen. This growing mandate for a peace process has added weight to the country’s peace movement.

Although the Helmand protesters have not said anything about their next phase of activism, the peace movement has become a nationwide phenomenon. It has won the hearts and minds of ordinary Afghans. Moreover, it was also heartening to see the Taliban show compassion to the peace activists. Currently, the Helmand protesters are interacting with residents in the north to gain more support for their movement.

“We [continue to] go to villages and meet the people to support our efforts,”said Mirwais Kanai, one of the organizers. “In the beginning, some people had doubts and were blaming the protesters for being a project of foreigners or the government. That’s why only a small number of protesters marched to Kabul. We have been working on people’s mindsets and now the people have understood that [we] are really working for peace.”

Press freedom is under attack

As Trump cracks down on political speech, independent media is increasingly necessary.

Truthout produces reporting you won’t see in the mainstream: journalism from the frontlines of global conflict, interviews with grassroots movement leaders, high-quality legal analysis and more.

Our work is possible thanks to reader support. Help Truthout catalyze change and social justice — make a tax-deductible monthly or one-time donation today.

Share
Share

…Reading List

War & Peace
A Torturous Sanitation Disaster Is Unfolding in Gaza’s Displacement Camps
Prisons & Policing
These Dallas Residents Are on the Front Lines of Trump’s War Against “Antifa”
Immigration
ICE Kidnapped My Neighbor in Broad Daylight. The Aftermath Left Me Reeling.
Economy & Labor
Elon Musk Wants $1 Trillion to Build a “Robot Army” at Tesla
Culture & Media
The World Is Falling Apart. In a New Book, Activists Help Us Piece It Together.
Human Rights
Israel and US Scorn ICJ Ruling Against Starving Civilians as Method of Warfare
Related Stories
Soldiers ready a tank in the Afghan capital city of Kabul on February 22, 1989.

The West Ignores Afghanistan at Its Peril

We must re-examine the Afghan Civil War if we want to understand why the US remains at perpetual war.
By
|

A Question From Afghanistan: “Can We Abolish War?”

Acts of kindness will launch #Enough!, a long term campaign initiated by the Afghan Peace Volunteers to abolish war.
By
|

International Day of Nonviolence in Afghanistan

We need this excitement to generate more and more circles of friendship, along with many more relationships that can help us understand that our governments have unfortunately disguised perpetual …
By
Latest Stories
A boy walks through a puddle of sewage water past mounds of trash and rubble along a street in the Jabalia camp for Palestinian refugees in the northern Gaza Strip, on August 14, 2024.
|

A Torturous Sanitation Disaster Is Unfolding in Gaza’s Displacement Camps

Every morning we wake to disease, dust, and the unbearable stench of open sewage.
By
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to be media prior to signing an executive order renaming the Department of Defense as the Department of War as U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (C) and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force Gen. Dan Caine (R) look on on September 05, 2025 in Washington, DC.
|

Trump Flouts Constitution With Caribbean Strikes: “We’re Just Going to Kill”

“I don’t think we’re going to necessarily ask for a declaration of war. I think we’re just gonna kill people,” he said.
By
Navy Landing Craft Air Cushions unload equipment onto the beach as U.S. Marine Corps V-22 Ospreys and CH-53 Super Stallions fly overhead during the America's Marines 250 event at Camp Pendleton's Red Beach on October 18, 2025 in Oceanside, California. The U.S. Marines are marking their 250th anniversary with a live amphibious assault demonstration entitled "Sea To Shore--A Review of Amphibious Strength" and visits from Vice President JD Vance and War Secretary Pete Hegseth.
|

US Strikes 2 Boats in Pacific Ocean as Hegseth Pledges “Strikes Will Continue”

Members of Congress say the Pentagon has still not provided any evidence to back justifications for the attacks.
By
Reporters carry their belongings from the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., on October 15, 2025 after U.S. and international news outlets including The New York Times, AP, AFP and Fox News declined to sign new restrictive Pentagon media rules, and were stripped of their press access credentials.
|

Critics Denounce Pentagon Loyalty Pledge Signatories as “Propaganda Corps”

“That’s a lot of stenographers,” said one journalist.
By
Members of the Bolivarian Armed Forces take part in a military exercise at Fort Tiuna in Caracas, Venezuela, on September 20, 2025.
|

Trump Is Gunning for War in Venezuela, Raising Fears of US-Backed Regime Change

Venezuelans fear US strikes on boats in the Caribbean could be a leadup to US backing for a Pinochet-style dictatorship.
By
Adam Smith, member of the U.S. House of Representatives and leading member of the House Committee on Armed Services for the Democrats, speaks to journalists on 23 September 2025, in Beijing, China.
|

Democrat Says Trump Admin Still Lacks “Any Evidence” to Back Caribbean Strikes

The administration is now openly targeting Colombia while refusing to provide evidence to back their determinations.
By
Palestinian flags flutter on top of rubble in Gaza City on October 12, 2025.
|

Recognizing Palestinian Statehood Is the Floor. Liberation Must Be the Ceiling.

One by one, nations formally recognized the State of Palestine. But what does that mean with Gaza reduced to rubble?
By
U.S. Marines unload from a V-22 Osprey aircraft in Ceiba, Puerto Rico, on September 13, 2025, as tensions mount with Venezuela over Washington's military build-up in the Caribbean.
|

Senators Launch a Bipartisan Bid to Block Possible Trump War on Venezuela

This comes as two survivors of the US’s most recent drone strike on a boat have reportedly been detained by US forces.
By
Children walk past a Sudanese army parade in the streets of Gedaref in eastern Sudan on August 14, 2025, marking the 71st anniversary of the formation of the Sudanese army. Since it began in April 2023, the Sudanese war between the regular army and its paramilitary rival, the Rapid Support Forces, has killed tens of thousands of people and driven millions from their homes.
|

Mainstream Media Miss the Global Significance of Counterrevolution in Sudan

This is a war against civilians and against a truly pro-democracy revolution, says Professor Khalid Mustafa Medani.
By
A US Air Force Boeing C-5 Galaxy is parked at José Aponte de la Torre Airport, formerly Roosevelt Roads Naval Station, on September 13, 2025 in Ceiba, Puerto Rico.
|

A US Strike in Caribbean Leaves Survivors, Reports Say

News of the strike comes as the US military’s top commander for Latin America has suddenly stepped down.
By

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp